Batu is a grandson of Genghis Khan …
Years: 1229 - 1229
Batu is a grandson of Genghis Khan and the son of Mongol leader Jochi.
After Jochi's death in early 1227, Genghis Khan had assigned Jochi's appanages to his sons, but the Great Khan had installed Batu as Khan of the Ulus of Jochi.
Jochi's eldest son, Orda Khan, had also agreed that Batu should succeed their father.
Genghis Khan's youngest brother Temüge attended the coronation ceremony as an official representative of Genghis.
When Genghis Khan died in August 1227, he left four thousand Mongol men to Jochi's family.
Jochi's lands were divided between Batu and his older brother Orda.
Orda's White Horde ruled the lands roughly between the Volga river and Lake Balkhash, while Batu's Horde ruled all the Mongol-claimed territories west of the Volga River and has been given responsibility for the invasion of Europe.
According to Abulghazi, Batu had joined Ögedei's military campaign against the Jin Dynasty in North China while his younger brother was fighting the Bashkirs, the Cumans, the Bulgars and the Alans in the west.
Despite heavy resistance of their enemies, the Mongols had conquered the major cities of the Jurchens and made the Bashkirs their ally.
Ögedei dispatches three tumens under Kukhdei and Sundei in 1229 to conquer the tribes on the lower Ural River.
Locations
People
Groups
- Alans (Sarmatian tribal grouping)
- Bashkirs
- Jurchens
- Cuman people, or Western Kipchaks, also called Polovtsy, Polovtsians)
- Mongols
- Mongol Empire
- Jin Dynasty (Chin Empire), Jurchen
Topics
- Mongol conquest of the Jin dynasty
- Mongol Invasions of Georgia and Armenia
- Mongol Invasion of Europe
- Mongol Invasions of Rus'
- Mongol Invasion of Volga Bulgaria
